McNeill v. State

984 P.2d 5, 1999 Alas. App. LEXIS 66, 1999 WL 553451
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 30, 1999
DocketA-7001
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 984 P.2d 5 (McNeill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeill v. State, 984 P.2d 5, 1999 Alas. App. LEXIS 66, 1999 WL 553451 (Ala. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Two state troopers came to McNeill’s house to investigate an on-going domestic disturbance between McNeill and his wife. Just as the troopers were about to begin questioning McNeill, he ordered them to “get the hell out” of his house. The troopers refused to leave until McNeill explained what was going on. The primary issue presented in this appeal is whether, under these circumstances, the troopers were obliged to administer Miranda warnings to McNeill before they questioned him. As explained below, we conclude that McNeill was not in custody for Miranda purposes at this time, and therefore the troopers did not need to advise McNeill of his rights.

The Miranda issue

Late in the evening of December 8, 1997, Steven A. McNeill got into a fight with his wife, and his wife called 911. Two state troopers were dispatched to the McNeill residence in response to this call. When they *6 arrived, McNeill’s wife was still on the phone to the 911 dispatcher. Ms. McNeill met the troopers outside the residence and told them that her head hurt; she said that McNeill had thrown his coat at her and that something hard in the coat pocket had struck her in the head. One of the troopers examined Ms. McNeill’s head and observed swelling and bruising. Ms. McNeill also told the troopers that, because of her fear of her husband, she had armed herself with a handgun. However, Ms. McNeill then declared that her head injury was the result of an accident and that it was “no big deal”.

The troopers decided to speak with McNeill (who was still inside the house). McNeill at first invited the troopers into the house, and he does not claim that their entry constituted a trespass. But McNeill soon reconsidered his decision; he told the troopers to “get the hell out of [his] house and leave [him] alone.” Given the circumstances, the troopers refused to leave until they could determine what was going on between McNeill and his wife. The troopers told McNeill, “[We] will [leave] as soon as you tell [us] what’s going on.”

In the ensuing conversation, McNeill told the troopers that he had “tossed” his coat at his wife, and that a hard object in the pocket (which McNeill identified as “a couple of CD-ROMs”) struck his wife in the head. The troopers believed that McNeill might have assaulted his wife, but they nevertheless gave him the option of leaving the house rather than being arrested. McNeill would have none of this; he refused to leave and instead demanded to be arrested. He also insisted that the troopers arrest his wife because she had pointed a gun at him. After the troopers concluded to their satisfaction that McNeill had been the initial aggressor, they arrested him for fourth-degree assault. 1

McNeill was tried in the district court. In the middle of his trial, McNeill asked District Court Judge Herschel E. Crutchfield to suppress the statements he made to the troopers on the evening of his arrest — in particular, his statement that he had tossed his coat at his wife. McNeill claimed that he had been in custody during his conversation with the troopers, and he argued that his statements should be suppressed because the troopers had not given him Miranda warnings. 2

Because McNeill waited until trial to make this motion, and because he failed to offer any reason for waiting so long to make the motion, McNeill apparently forfeited his right to raise this suppression issue. See Alaska Criminal Rule 12(b)(3) and (e). Nevertheless, Judge Crutchfield allowed McNeill to litigate his motion. 3 Following a hearing, the judge concluded that McNeill had not been in custody when he conversed with the troopers; the judge therefore refused to suppress McNeill’s statements.

On appeal, McNeill argues that he was obviously in custody, since the troopers suspected him of assaulting his wife and because they refused to leave him alone and get out of his house. But the fact that McNeill may have been the focus of police suspicion does not mean that he was in custody for Miranda purposes. 4

McNeill points to the fact that the troopers refused to leave his house until he talked to them. Generally, in determining whether a person is in custody for Miranda purposes, a court must ask whether, “under the circumstances of the police interaction with the suspect, ... a reasonable person [would] have felt free to break off the interrogation and, depending on the location, either leave or ask the police to leave ”. 5 McNeill relies on this last phrase of the custody test; he contends that he was obviously in custody because the troopers openly refused to leave his house when he asked them to.

*7 But this formulation of the Miranda custody test is somewhat inexact. This wording suggests that Miranda warnings will be required whenever a person is “seized” for Fourth Amendment purposes, but that is not the law. The cases applying Miranda recognize that there are some Fourth Amendment seizures of temporary duration — most notably, routine traffic stops and other investigative stops — in which Miranda warnings are not required, even though the person is temporarily in custody and the police can properly ignore a request that the officers depart and leave the person alone. 6

To the extent that there was a Fourth Amendment seizure in McNeill’s case, that seizure was of temporary duration for investigative purposes, and it fell short of Miranda custody. The troopers had plenty of reason to intervene at the McNeill household and investigate what was going on. They had come to the McNeills’ home in response to Ms. McNeill’s 911 call. A domestic disturbance was either ongoing or had just ended. McNeill’s wife had suffered a head injury, and she told the troopers that she had armed herself with a handgun. To confuse matters, Ms. McNeill claimed that her husband had injured her accidentally, and that the occurrence was “no big deal”. Thus, when the troopers went into the house to speak to McNeill, it was still unclear what had happened. Moreover, the officers could reasonably suspect that the domestic disturbance might continue or escalate if they left without investigating. We hold that, under these circumstances, the troopers were entitled to remain in the house temporarily and question McNeill without giving him Miranda warnings.

In reaching this decision, we are mindful of two previous cases in which we held that defendants who were subjected to investiga-five questioning inside their houses were, in fact, held in custody for Miranda purposes. In Moss v. State 7 and Higgins v. State 8

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
984 P.2d 5, 1999 Alas. App. LEXIS 66, 1999 WL 553451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneill-v-state-alaskactapp-1999.